Daveigh Chase died on June 16, 2026, at a Los Angeles hospital. She was 35. The cited causes were complications from AIDS, meningitis, and septic shock, coupled persistent polysubstance use. Reports in the days following her death depicted her later years as exceedingly tough – periods of homelessness, major health decline, and hospitalization for malnutrition just before she died. In light of this, one of the most devastating contrasts in recent Hollywood news was the financial picture that surfaced.
Her publicly disclosed net worth at the time of death was estimated somewhere between $500,000 and $5 million, based on what could be cobbled together from her acting work. But her longtime manager John Ryan told The California Post that the number didn’t reflect the complete story.
The Lilo is the particular anchor anchor anchor anchor anchor anchor duty. Chase portrayed Lilo in Disney’s Lilo & Stitch in 2002 – a film that has remained commercially active ever since, producing cash through merchandise, theme park usage, streaming, home media, and the kind of persistent cultural devotion that keeps a property in rotation for decades. Ryan claimed that she was entitled to continuous payments related to precisely such uses under the terms of her initial contract.
During a time when she was dealing with addiction and unstable housing, Chase, by Ryan’s account, was unable to handle the paperwork and process of claiming the money. The film itself has been the topic of increased attention in 2026 ahead of a live-action adaptation – a project that puts the original voice cast back into cultural debate at exactly the moment of her death. That timing, purely coincidental, increased the visibility of what was lost.
From 2002 was a complete inversion from 2002 was a complete inversion. One of the most frequently cited horror images of the early 2000s was Samara Morgan, the pale, long-haired character in The Ring who crawls off the television screen. Chase performed that part at around 12 years old, with a body and presence that carried far more threat than the role strictly required. The Ring had significant commercial success. Her contribution to it was real and noticed by audiences who remembered it for years.
She also featured in HBO’s Big Love as Rhonda Volmer, a manipulative girl reared in a polygamist household — another character that employed her talent to present something unpleasant below a surface of apparent normalcy. Following that, she only sometimes appeared on film, and it was considerably more difficult to follow her public life through traditional entertainment media.

The question of what happens to the unclaimed money now — how much of it can actually be recovered, who controls her estate, whether the GoFundMe launched by someone claiming as her boyfriend reflects legitimate channels — remains unsettled at this writing. Ryan highlighted that next of kin can often pursue residuals after a performer’s death, which affords at least a legal road ahead. Whether the path is navigated effectively is a different story.

